(February 2018)
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The American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS) Installment Sales Coverage is designed primarily for individuals or businesses selling merchandise to purchasers on an installment sales plan or offering merchandise to customers for trial periods. The common denominator in any installment type plan is that both parties retain a financial interest in the merchandise until the day it is paid for in full. Both parties will want coverage on the merchandise in case it is lost, damaged, or destroyed. The IM 7303–Installment Sales Coverage is written on a single interest basis coverage and only the named insured seller's financial interest in the merchandise. The purchaser should protect its interest with the appropriate property coverage form.
This coverage form insures all property the named insured sells on an installment sales plan if its accounting records show its variable financial interest in the property, and if the property or merchandise involved is not otherwise excluded or limited. It covers all such transactions as of their inception dates, whether the transactions are already in force or new. Coverage continues until the final payment on the merchandise is made or the policy expires.
Any individual, business, or commercial enterprise that sells merchandise on a conditional or installment sales plan and retains a financial interest in the merchandise until the final payment made is eligible.
AAIS Installment Sales Coverage requires at least these four forms:
Related Article: CL 0100–AAIS Commercial Lines Common Policy Conditions
This Schedule of Coverages is used with IM 7303–Installment Sales Coverage. IM 7308 contains the following information:
The 01 12 edition added a space to enter the policy number.
A description of
the covered property is entered in the space provided.
This is the most
paid in a single occurrence for loss to covered property.
The 01 12 edition added quotation marks
around the word Limit (“Limit”) because Limit is a defined word.
The limit for this coverage on the Schedule of Coverages applies to all covered locations.
The limit is $5,000 unless a
different limit is entered.
This coverage provides additional coverage.
The limit is $10,000 unless a different limit is entered.
The Deductible
Amount for all covered perils must be entered in the
space provided.
Additional Information (01 12
change)
This section of the schedule of coverages lists endorsements and forms included when the policy is issued.
The previous edition referred to this
section as Optional Coverages and Endorsements.
This analysis is of
the 04 04 edition.
The insurance company agrees to provide the coverage described in the coverage form and in the schedule of coverages in return for the named insured agreeing to pay the premium. This agreement is subject to all the coverage form's terms, conditions, endorsements, and definitions.
Defined terms are used throughout the coverage form. Restricting their meaning to the definition in it is how all parties have a clearer understanding of the coverage intended. Eleven terms are defined:
1. You and your
These are the parties named on the declarations as the insured.
2. We, us, and our
This is the insurance company that provides the coverage.
3. Earth movement
This is earthquake, landslide, mudflow, mudslide, mine subsidence, sinking, rising, or shifting of
the earth. It also includes vibration or the earth moving in any other way. It
does not include sinkhole collapse.
4. Flood
Flood is more than
just flood. It is also surface water, waves, tidal water, or overflow of bodies
of water. Spray that results from these is also considered
flood even when wind is driving the
spray.
5. Limit
The
amount of coverage that applies to the insured property.
6. Pollutant
This is a broad and
expansive term. It is solids, liquids, thermal or radioactive contaminants, and
irritants. It includes, but is not limited to, acids, alkalis, chemicals,
fumes, smoke, soot, vapor, and waste. Waste includes materials intended for
recycling, reclamation, and reconditioning as well as for disposal. Visible and
invisible electrical or magnetic emissions and sound emissions are also considered pollutants.
7. Schedule of
coverages
Any page labeled as
such that contains coverage information, including declarations or supplemental
declarations.
8. Sinkhole collapse
The earth’s surface
suddenly settling or collapsing into an underground opening that was created by water acting on limestone or some other rock
formation. Sinkhole collapse does not include value
of the land that collapsed or the cost to fill sinkholes.
9. Specified perils
The named perils of
aircraft, civil commotion, explosion, falling objects, fire, hail, fire
extinguishing equipment leakage, lightning, riot, sinkhole collapse, smoke,
sonic boom, vandalism, vehicles, volcanic action, water damage, the weight of sleet, snow or ice and windstorm. Two
terms need further explanation.
Falling objects
does not include loss to personal property that is stored in the open. Damage
to the interior of buildings or personal property stored in buildings by a
falling object applies only if that falling object first breaches the
building's exterior.
Water damage starts
with the cracking or breaking of a part of the system or appliance that is
holding the steam or water and then the sudden or accidental discharge or
leakage of water or steam occurs.
10. Terms
All policy
provisions, limitations, exclusions, conditions, and definitions that apply to
this coverage.
11. Volcanic action
Airborne volcanic
blast or shock waves, ash, dust, and particulate matter but not the cost to
remove dust, ash, or particulate matter when it did not directly damage covered
property. Lava flow is also volcanic
action.
Coverage applies to
the property described below, subject to any exclusions or limitations.
1. Coverage
Coverage applies to
direct physical loss from a covered peril to property that the named insured
sold to a purchaser. Only such property that is an installment sales plan is
covered. There are two different types of installment sales plan. One is a
conditional sale or trust agreement and the other is any type of a deferred
payment plan.
Example: Adventure Appliances and Electronics sells small and large household appliances and home
electronics. Scenario 1:
Bonjour Condominiums is interested in buying all of their appliances from Adventure
Appliances Before the developer makes the purchase she asks that Adventure
provide all of the appliances for the model unit as an enticement for condominium
purchasers. These appliances are covered under
Adventure’s installment sales floater because they are part of a conditional
sale. Scenario 2: Mike
and Sally purchase a refrigerator from Adventure and finance it through
Adventure’s finance department. The refrigerator is covered
under Adventure’s installment sales floater until Mike and Sally make their
final payment. |
2. Coverage
Limitation
Coverage applies to
only to the type of property on the schedule of coverages sold under an
installment sales plan. This property is covered only while
in transit to the purchaser and at the purchaser's premises. The named
insured's interest in the property is the only interest covered. Its interest
is the amount the purchaser still owes on the loan as of the date of loss.
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Example: Mike
and Sally’s home sustains major fire damage and the refrigerator is destroyed. Mike and Sally had made their final payment
a few days before the fire so the installment sales floater pays nothing
because Adventure Appliances no longer had an interest in the refrigerator. |
Six specific types of property are not covered:
1. Aircraft or
Watercraft
Aircraft and watercraft coverage forms and policies should be used to cover these items.
2. Buildings and Land
An installment sales floater covers only personal property.
3. Contraband
Property
that is illegal to possess, or that is legal but in the course of illegal
transportation, is not covered.
Example: Mike and Sally bought multiple refrigerators in Wyoming and had them
shipped to California to sell, at a profit, to friends who did not want to
pay the higher prices for appliances that met California’s stricter rules.
This trade is illegal so any loss to the refrigerators would
not be covered. |
4. Money and
Securities
Accounts, bills, currency, food stamps, evidence of debt, and lottery tickets not held for sale are not covered in addition to money, notes, or securities.
Note: This property is more correctly insured under commercial crime coverage forms.
Related Article: Commercial Crime Coverage Analysis
5. Vehicles
Automobiles or self-propelled vehicles that are built to be used on public highways are not covered.
Note: This property is more correctly insured under commercial automobile coverage forms. Single-interest or dual interest endorsements may be utilized to protect the interest of the financing entity.
Related Article: CA 00 01–Business Auto Coverage Form Analysis
6. Waterborne
Property
Except when the property is in transit while in a carrier for hire's care, custody, or control, there is no coverage.
Example: Pat bought an ATV from Fun at the Farm and financed it for 12 months. Pat lived over the bay from Fun at the Farm. He owned a pontoon boat and was able to load the ATV on the boat for the trip home. Unfortunately, an unidentified boat crashed into Pat’s boat and fled the scene. The boat and the ATV were destroyed. Fun at the Farm is not covered for the loss of the ATV. |
Provisions That Apply
To Coverage Extensions
There is one coverage extension. Its limit is either the limit on the schedule of coverages or the default limit included in the coverage form. This limit is part of the applicable limit for covered property and not in addition to it unless otherwise indicated. It is not added to or combined with the limit for any other coverage extension or supplemental coverage and is not subject to any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
Debris Removal
a. When a covered peril damages or destroys covered property, the cost to
remove any created debris is covered under this
extension.
b. Debris removal does not
include any costs for
removing, restoring, replacing polluted land, or water or to extract pollutants.
c. There are two parts of the Limit section. The first is restricting any
debris removal payment to no more than 25% of the amount paid for the actual
direct physical loss.
The second part is
that when the debris removal and the physical damage loss are
added together, no more than the limit of insurance is paid.
d. An additional $5,000 (or a higher amount entered on the schedule of
coverages) is available if the debris removal expense is more than 25% of the
loss amount or if the combined cost of loss and debris removal is more than the
limit of insurance for the covered property.
e. The named insured must report debris removal expenses to the insurance
company within 180 days of the loss date in order for this coverage extension
to apply.
Provisions That Apply
To Supplemental Coverages
There is one supplemental coverage and its default limit can be increased by entering a higher limit on the schedule of coverages. Its limits are separate from the applicable limit for the covered property, not part of it.
The limit available for coverage described under a supplemental coverage is the only limit available for it. It is not the total of the limit for a supplemental coverage and the limit for the covered property. The limits are not added to or combined with limits for any other supplemental coverage or coverage extension. They also are not subject to any coinsurance provisions that apply elsewhere in the coverage form.
Pollutant Cleanup and
Removal
a. The insurance company pays the named insured's expenses to extract pollutants from land or water if a covered peril that occurred during the policy period caused the pollutants to be released or discharged.
b. This is immediate coverage so any expenses to extract pollutants are paid only when reported to the insurance company within 180 days of the date of loss.
c. Costs related to testing, evaluating, observing, or recording pollutants are excluded except for those costs that are part of the extraction process.
d. The most paid at any one location is
$10,000 for all such expenses that a covered peril that occurs at that location
during each separate 12-month policy period causes. This limit can be increased.
Coverage applies to risks of direct physical loss unless the loss is limited or caused by an excluded peril.
1. Primary Exclusions
The first group of
exclusions is essentially absolute. Subject to specific exceptions, loss or
damage by each is totally excluded, regardless of any
other cause or event that contributes to a loss, either concurrently or in any
other sequence. The insurance company does not pay for any direct or indirect
loss or damage caused by or that results from any of these events.
a. Civil
Authority
There
is no coverage for a loss that results
from an order any civil or government authority issues. These orders may include seizure,
confiscation, destruction, or quarantine of property but this exclusion is not
limited to only these. The only exception is when a civil authority destroying
property as a means of controlling a fire causes the loss or damage. This
exception applies only if the fire is the result of a covered peril.
b. Earth
Movement or Volcanic Eruption
Earth movement is not covered except for the following four exceptions:
c. Flood
The insurance
company does not pay for loss or damage caused by flood. There are two exceptions:
d. Nuclear
Hazard
The insurance
company does not cover loss or damage caused by or that results from any
nuclear reaction, radiation, or contamination. This is absolute and applies
whether the nuclear incident was controlled or not, and by whatever means
caused. Any loss the nuclear hazard causes is not treated
as a loss that fire, explosion, or smoke causes. The only exception is when a
fire results from the nuclear fire, direct loss or damage from that fire is covered but the damage from the nuclear hazard remains
excluded.
e. Sewer Backup
and Water below the Surface
Coverage does not
apply to loss or damage caused by water that backs up from a sewer or drain. It
also does not apply when water below the surface of the ground exerts pressure
on covered buildings or structures and causes damage.
There are two
exceptions:
f. War and Military Action
The insurance
company does not pay for loss or damage caused by any act of war. Undeclared
and civil war or warlike actions by a military force are all considered war. All
actions taken to hinder or defend against an actual or expected attack by any
government or sovereign authority that uses military personnel or other agents are also considered war and excluded. In addition, acts of insurrection,
rebellion, revolution, or unlawful seizure of power and any action any
government authority takes to prevent or defend against any such acts are excluded. If any action within the terms of this
exclusion involves nuclear reaction, radiation, or contamination, this
exclusion applies in place of the nuclear hazard exclusion.
Note: This means that the exception for resulting fire under the nuclear
hazard is not covered when it is the result of war.
2. Secondary
Exclusions
The second group of
exclusions applies to loss or damage caused by or that
result from any of the following loss events. Some of these exclusions have
exceptions, conditions, or limitations that should be noted
and reviewed carefully. The insurance company does not pay for any loss
or damage caused by or that results from any of these events.
a. Contamination
or Deterioration
Loss or damage that
is caused by contamination or deterioration is
excluded. This applies to corrosion, decay, fungus, mildew, mold, rot, and rust.
It also applies to any quality, fault, or weakness in covered property that
causes it to damage or destroy itself. However, this exclusion is not limited
to only these described causes.
b. Criminal,
Fraudulent, Dishonest, or Illegal Acts
Coverage does not apply
to loss caused by or that results from criminal, fraudulent, dishonest, or
illegal acts that any of the following commit alone or in collusion with
another:
Coverage applies if
employees destroy property. It does not apply if employees steal.
This exclusion does
not apply to covered property in the custody of carriers for hire.
c. Electrical Currents
A loss that is caused by electrical arcing or currents is excluded. There are exceptions:
d. Loss of Use
There is no coverage for loss that results from delay, loss of use, or loss of market.
e. Mechanical Breakdown
Mechanical,
structural, or electrical breakdown or malfunction caused loss is excluded. This applies even if the loss or damage is caused by a breakdown that is the result of a structural,
mechanical, or reconditioning process.
f. Missing
Property
The
unexplained or mysterious disappearance of covered property is excluded. This exclusion applies when there is no
physical evidence that something happened to the property. It applies when the
only proof that a loss occurred is a property shortage that is
based on an audit or physical
inventory. The one exception is for covered property that is in the custody of
carriers for hire.
g. Pollutants
There is no
coverage for loss caused by or that results from any release, discharge,
seepage, migration, dispersal, or escape of pollutants. There are three
exceptions:
h. Temperature/Humidity
Coverage does not
apply to loss or damage that dryness, dampness, humidity, changes in, or
extremes of temperature causes. However, if a covered peril occurs because of
any of these, coverage applies to the loss or damage that covered peril causes.
i. Theft from an Unattended Vehicle
Coverage does not apply to theft of covered property from an
unattended vehicle unless the vehicle was locked, its windows securely closed,
and there was visible evidence of
forced entry into the vehicle. This exclusion does not apply to covered
property in the custody of carriers for hire.
j. Voluntary
Parting
There is no
coverage for loss or damage to covered property when it is voluntarily
given to others, even if the surrender was due to a fraudulent scheme,
trick, or false pretense.
k. Wear and Tear
Loss or damage
caused by wear, tear, marring, or scratching is excluded.
There is no exception.
Note: This is particularly relevant for this coverage because it is in the
custody of a third party over whom the named insured
has no control.
1. Notice
The named insured
must give prompt notice of a loss to the insurance company or its agent. The
notice must include a description of the property lost or damaged. If a
criminal act caused the loss, the appropriate law enforcement agency must also be notified. The insurance company has the right
to require that any notice is
given in writing.
Note: The named insured does not control the covered property. The first notice the named insured will have is when the purchaser notified it of the loss or refuses to make any further payments because of the loss. Once the named insured becomes aware of the loss it is expected to provide prompt notice.
2. You Must Protect
Property
During and after a
loss, the named insured must take all reasonable steps to protect covered
property from further loss. The insurance company pays reasonable costs the
named insured incurs to do so but the named insured must maintain accurate records to substantiate the costs.
Paying these costs is not in addition to the policy limits. There is no
coverage for any repairs or emergency measures performed on property not
already damaged by a covered peril.
Note: This could be
difficult for the named insured to satisfy because it does not have control of
the property at the time of the loss. The purchaser is not a party to this
insurance so is not obligated to satisfy this condition. The named insured also
cannot be expected to honor this condition at the time
of loss because its notification of a loss may not come until a finance payment
is not paid. However, once the named
insured is aware, it is expected to take appropriate
action.
3. Proof of Loss
The named insured
must complete and return the insurance company's prescribed proof of loss forms
within 60 days after the company requests it. The information provided must
include the time, place, and circumstances involved with the loss and
information on any other insurance coverage that may apply. It must also
include the named insured’s interest and the interest of others with respect to
the property involved, including lienholders, loss payees, and mortgagees. Any
changes in the title to the property
during the policy period must be disclosed, in
addition to providing any other reasonable information the company may require
to adjust and settle the loss.
Note: The named insured will generally have very limited information
regarding the loss. Whatever factual information it
does have must be provided. The insurance company may need to develop much of
the loss information directly from the purchaser because the named insured will
be unable to attest to cause of loss and circumstances around it.
4. Examination
Examination under
oath may be required in matters that relate to the loss. The insurance company
may request these examinations more than once but such requests must be
reasonable. If multiple persons are examined, the
company has the right to examine each individual separately.
Note: Only the named insured is required to submit to examination. This means
that information provided by the purchaser is voluntary. The purchaser refusing
to provide a statement will not violate this condition.
5. Records
The named insured is
required to must produce all records that relate to the loss. The insurance
company must be allowed to make copies and take
extracts of them as often as it reasonably requests. Records include tax
returns and bank microfilms of all related cancelled
checks but records are not limited to just these.
6. Damaged Property
Both damaged and
undamaged property must be made available for the
insurance company's inspection as often as reasonably necessary. It must also be allowed to take samples of the property to the
extent necessary to adjust and settle the loss.
Note: This could be a problem again because the named insured is not in
control of the property at the time of loss. If the named insured has control
of the property, it must comply with this condition but it cannot
be penalized when it has no control.
7. Volunteer Payments
The named insured may
not voluntarily make payments, assume obligations, pay or offer rewards, or
incur other expenses without the insurance company's express approval. If it
does, it does so at its own expense. The only exceptions are those costs
incurred to protect property as item 2. above
describes.
8. Abandonment
The named insured is not permitted to demand that the named insured take
ownership of the damaged property. The transfer of ownership will take place
only when the insurance company consents in writing.
9. Cooperation
The named insured is
required to cooperate with the insurance company but only as stated in the
covered form. However, this requirement does not extend to the purchaser.
1. Installment Sales
o If the realized value of the item is equal to or greater than the amount that remains due from the purchaser, there is no loss in value and there is no payment.
o If the realized value of repossessed property is less than the amount that remains due from the purchaser, the valuation of the loss is the difference between the realized value and the value on the named insured's accounting records.
Example: Hal’s Office Supply sold Vern some filing cabinets and desk/chair sets for his new accounting business valued at $10,000. Vern made a $1,000 down payment and signed a three-year sales contract. Eighteen months later, a hurricane devastated the area and Vern took that event as a signal to discontinue operations and move inland. Hal repossessed the furniture when Vern stopped paying for it. The value of the furniture was $2,000 because of storm damage and depreciation. Hal's accounting records revealed that he was still owed $4,500. The insurance company paid $2,500 ($4,500-$2,000) and Hal retained the furniture. |
2. Pair or Set
The value of a loss
that involves damage or loss of one part of a pair or set is
based on a reasonable proportion of the value of the entire pair or set.
However, the loss of one part of a pair or set is not
considered a total loss.
Note: This recognizes that the value of the whole
is greater than the value of individual parts but that the remaining parts
still have value as separates.
3. Loss to Parts
The value of a lost
or damaged part of the property that
consists of several parts is the cost to repair or replace only the lost or
damaged part.
How
Much We Pay
1. Insurable Interest
The insurance
company does not pay more than the named insured's insurable interest in the
covered property at the time of loss.
Note: Insurance
is meant to restore a person’s pre-loss financial
position, not to improve or enhance it.
2. Deductible
The insurance
company pays only the amount of loss that exceeds the deductible amount on the
schedule of coverages.
3. Loss Settlement
Terms
Subject to other
items in this section, the insurance company pays the least of the following:
4. Insurance under More Than One Coverage
Two or more coverages in the coverage form may apply to the same loss. In
that case, the insurance company does not pay more than the value of the actual
claim, loss, or damage sustained.
5. Insurance under
More Than One Policy
a. Proportional
Share
The named insured
may have other coverage subject to the same terms as this coverage form. In
that case, this coverage form pays only its share of the covered loss. That
share is the proportion that its limit of insurance bears to the limits of
insurance of all insurance that covers on the same basis.
b. Excess Amount
There may be other coverage available to pay for the loss other than as described in 7. a. above. In that case, this coverage form pays on an excess basis. It pays only the amount of covered loss that exceeds the amount due from the other coverage, whether collectible or not. Any payment is subject to the limit of insurance that applies.
Loss
Payment
1. Loss Payment
Options
a. Our Options
The insurance
company has four loss payment options if a covered loss occurs.
b. Notice of Our
Intent to Rebuild, Repair, or Replace
The insurance
company must notify the named insured of its intent to rebuild, repair, or
replace within 30 days after receiving a properly completed proof of loss.
2. Your Losses
a. Adjustment
and Payment of Loss
The insurance
company adjusts all losses with and pays the named insured, unless another loss
payee named in the policy is involved.
b. Conditions
for Payment of Loss
The insurance
company pays a covered loss within 30 days after it receives a properly
prepared proof of loss and the amount of loss is established. Either the amount
of loss is determined through a written agreement between the company and the
named insured or after an appraisal award is filed
with the company.
3. Property of Others
a. Adjustment
and Payment of Loss to Property of Others
The insurance
company has the option to adjust and pay losses that involve property of others
either to the named insured acting on the property
owner’s behalf or to the property owner.
b. We Do Not
Have to Pay You if We Pay the Owner
The insurance
company is not obligated to pay the named insured when it pays the property
owner. In addition, if the property owner sues the named insured, the company
has the option to defend the named insured in that suit.
1. Appraisal
The insurance
company and the insured may not always agree on a covered claim’s value. This
condition provides one method to resolve disputed claims.
Either party can
request an appraisal to determine a disputed claim’s value. Once requested, the
parties have 20 days to obtain their own independent and competent appraisers
and give their appraiser's name to the other party. The two appraisers then
have 15 days to select a competent impartial umpire. If they cannot agree on an
umpire within that time period, either can request
that a judge in the court of record in the state where the property is located
appoint one.
The appraisers then
determine the claim’s value. They submit any differences to the umpire. Once
any two of the three parties agree, the amount of loss is set.
Each party pays its
own appraiser. Both parties share the umpire’s cost and other expenses equally.
2. Benefit to Others
The insurance
provided does not directly or indirectly benefit any
party that has custody of the named insured's property.
3. Conformity with
Statute
Any condition in
this coverage form that conflicts with any applicable law is
amended to conform to that law.
4. Estates
Note: This condition applies only if the named
insured is an individual.
a. Your Death
If the named
insured dies, the person who has custody of the named insured's property is an
insured until a qualified legal representative is appointed. The named
insured’s legal representative becomes an insured once appointed. Both are
insureds but only with respect to the property insured under this coverage
form.
b. Policy Period
Is Not Extended
This coverage does
not extend past the policy’s expiration date.
5. Misrepresentation,
Concealment or Fraud
This coverage is
void if any insured at any time willfully concealed or misrepresented a
material fact that relates to the insurance provided, the property covered, or
its interest in the property. It is also void if fraud or false swearing by any
insured took place concerning the insurance provided or the property covered.
Note: It is important to note that this condition
applies to the named insured not the purchaser. The purchaser is not an insurer
so his or her falsehoods related to the cause of loss or any other aspect
should have no impact on coverage for the named insured.
6. Policy Period
Only covered losses
that occur during the policy period are paid.
7. Recoveries
Paying the loss
does not end the obligations of the named insured and the insurance company
toward one another. Additional provisions apply if the insurance company pays a
loss and the lost or damaged property is subsequently
recovered or the parties responsible for the loss pay for it.
Either party that
recovers property or payment must inform the other. Recovery expenses that
either party incurred are reimbursed first. If the
named insured keeps the recovered property, it must refund the amount of the
claim the insurance company paid, unless the company agrees to a different
amount. If the claim paid is less than the agreed loss due to applying a
deductible or another limitation, any recovery is prorated
between the named insured and the insurance company based on the company's
respective interest in the loss.
8. Restoration of
Limits
Payment of a claim
does not reduce the limit available for future claims.
9. Subrogation
The insurance
company acquires the named insured's rights of recovery from third parties
after it pays a loss. The named insured must help the insurance company secure
those rights. The company is not obligated to pay a loss if the named insured
hinders or impairs the company's rights of subrogation. However, the named
insured can agree in writing to waive recovery rights from others before a loss
occurs.
Note: Many finance agreements will provide mutual waivers of subrogation. If
so, these waivers do not hinder the named insured ability to collect.
10. Suit against Us
The insurance
company cannot be sued by anyone for any coverage
until all the terms of the coverage form have been met. Suits must be brought within two years after the insured first had
knowledge of a loss. If a state law invalidates this condition, any suit
brought must comply with the provisions of that law and begin within the
shortest period of time allowed by law.
Note: It is normal for a basic coverage form to be modified by mandatory state-specific endorsements that
address issues that relate to that specific state.
11. Territorial
Limits
Covered
property must be located in the
United States, its territories, and
possessions, Canada, or Puerto Rico in order for coverage to apply.
There are no endorsements developed specifically for this coverage. However, insurance companies that write this coverage may add their own endorsements that limit or broaden coverage or change terms and conditions.
A common and frequently requested endorsement is the dual interest extension of this coverage. The dual interest form covers the interests of both the named insured seller and the purchaser of the merchandise. Additional premium for this coverage is required because the full value of the merchandise is covered at all times until the final payment is made and the sale is complete. This is usually accomplished by an additional monthly charge from the seller to the purchaser and the named insured then pays the higher premium.
Another approach that may be taken is to add reporting conditions when there is a large fluctuation in the value of installment sales, as is usual with seasonal merchandise or merchandise with unusual valuation requirements.
Additional company specific endorsements may be available and used. Each should be examined to determine the effect it has on the coverage, especially when some may impose restrictions or controls that may be minimum requirements or prerequisites for the company to provide coverage or to accept a particular exposure.
This coverage is
difficult to underwrite because the named insured has no control over the
covered property. Because of this, underwriting must focus on the seller’s ownership
and experience, loss experience for this line of business, the general nature
of the customers who purchase the merchandise, and characteristics of the
property being sold.
The named insured
seller should have successfully engaged in this type of business for at least
five years. This ensures that it has likely survived some business cycles and
has learned how to manage this unique and potentially difficult operation. It
also usually means that the named insured is financially solvent and able to
continue to survive as business conditions change over time. Knowing how to
manage installment loans in good economic times can be considerably different
than when the economy is down and unemployment is high.
Previous loss
experience in this line is an excellent source of information to evaluate and
use to determine future loss activity. This measure presumes that the ownership
and management has been reasonably stable over time, changes in operations
minor, and the same general type of merchandise handled throughout the period.
The named insured
must have criteria in evaluating its customer’s eligibility to purchase
merchandise on an installment payment basis. Established procedures should be
in place and used to make this determination. Uniform background evaluations
and credit checks should be used. The amount of
deposit or down payment should be reasonable yet large enough to separate good
customers from those who may default.
The repossession rate should be reviewed carefully. It
is a good predictor of future loss activity because property loses its value
during repossession and losses are more likely to occur when the payments are
in arrears or the customer defaults.
The nature of the
merchandise sold also affects the underwriting process. Major household
appliances and furniture are commonly sold this way
and their loss record as a whole is generally good. However, the record for
computers, other electronic devices, and home entertainment systems is less
stable. The default and repossession rates for this type of property are
higher, the property depreciates or loses value more quickly, and it is more
damageable and susceptible to electrical disturbances and other less frequent
sources of loss. This type of property is also attractive from a theft
standpoint and can be easily transported and disposed of on the black market.
In general,
installment sales on certain types of merchandise are essential in today's
economy and are a normal way of doing business. Installment sales coverage can be underwritten successfully if the conditions that
affect it are recognized, evaluated, and needed adjustments or responses to
conditions implemented.